scholarly journals A Destructive New Disease of Citrus in China Caused by Cryptosporiopsis citricarpa sp. nov.

Plant Disease ◽  
2012 ◽  
Vol 96 (6) ◽  
pp. 804-812 ◽  
Author(s):  
Li Zhu ◽  
Xinghong Wang ◽  
Feng Huang ◽  
Jinze Zhang ◽  
Hongye Li ◽  
...  

Defoliation, dieback and mortality of Satsuma mandarin (Citrus unshiu), as well as kumquat (Fortunella margarita), in Chenggu County, Shaanxi Province, China was first noticed in 2006 and caused substantial economic losses to citrus production. The incidence of leaves infected approached 100% in some badly infected orchards. The disease prevailed only in late winter and early spring, where early symptoms were rounded and target-like spots on leaves. The disease was named target spot. Black conidiomata were observed on the upper surface of the leaves. A Cryptosporiopsis species was consistently recovered from the infected leaves, shoots, and branches. Koch's postulates were fulfilled by inoculating the conidial suspension of Cryptosporiopsis sp. onto the leaves of Satsuma mandarin. Phylogenetic analysis based on LSU sequence data indicated that this taxon clustered in Cryptosporiopsis (teleomorph: Neofabraea, Dermateaceae). Phylogenetic analysis based on ITS, SSU, and TUB indicated that the isolates of Cryptosporiopsis sp. constituted a distinct clade. Further study also demonstrated that this taxon was morphologically distinct from other species of Cryptosporiopsis, thus suggesting it might belong to an undescribed species. The name Cryptosporiopsis citricarpa sp. nov. is given to accommodate the fungal pathogen in this study.

Plant Disease ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 104 (6) ◽  
pp. 1744-1750 ◽  
Author(s):  
Wu Zhang ◽  
Ulrike Damm ◽  
Pedro W. Crous ◽  
Johannes Z. Groenewald ◽  
Xueli Niu ◽  
...  

Carpetgrass (Axonopus compressus) is a creeping, stoloniferous, perennial warm-season grass that is adapted to humid tropical and subtropical climates. Recently, outbreaks of anthracnose disease of A. compressus caused by an unidentified Colletotrichum sp. were observed in the Hainan and Guangdong provinces in southern China. In late winter and early spring, the disease incidence reached 100% in some badly infected lawns. Under high-moisture conditions, the crowns and oldest leaf sheaths of the majority of the plants became necrotic, which led to whole lawns turning reddish brown. Pathogenicity was confirmed by inoculating uninfected A. compressus plants with a conidial suspension of the Colletotrichum sp. isolated from diseased Axonopus plants. Phylogenetic analyses of the combined internal transcribed spacer, Sod2, Apn2, and Apn2/Mat1 sequences revealed the pathogen to be a novel species of the Colletotrichum graminicola species complex. Microscopic examination showed that the species was also morphologically distinct from related Colletotrichum species. As a result of the phylogenetic, morphological, and pathogenicity analyses, we propose the name Colletotrichum hainanense for this pathogen of A. compressus in southern China.


2020 ◽  
pp. 1-5
Author(s):  
Xiaoe Xiao ◽  
Yating Zeng ◽  
Wen Wang ◽  
Lan Cheng ◽  
Xinghua Qiao ◽  
...  

Citrus target spot, caused by Pseudofabraea citricarpa (Zhu et al.) Chen, Verkley & Crous, was a recently reported disease on satsuma mandarin and kumquat in Chenggu (Shaanxi province, China). In January 2019, target spot-like disease was also observed on ‘Eureka’ lemon and ‘Beijing’ lemon in Wanzhou (Chongqing province), satsuma in Yichang (Hubei province), and ‘Ponkan’ in Jishou (Hunan province). The identity of the causative agent was conducted and confirmed as P. citricarpa based on symptoms, fungal morphology, and multigene phylogenetic analysis, as well as pathogenicity tests. Investigations revealed that P. citricarpa can also infect ‘Tarocco’ blood orange and ‘Newhall’ navel orange. It can not only infect leaves and shoots but also can infect fruits. These results suggest that P. citricarpa could potentially spread to other citrus-growing regions in China.


Plant Disease ◽  
2009 ◽  
Vol 93 (3) ◽  
pp. 319-319 ◽  
Author(s):  
C. Y. Warfield ◽  
C. L. Blomquist ◽  
E. E. Lovig

Hellebore or Lenten rose (Helleborus × hybridus) is an evergreen, herbaceous perennial in the family Ranunculaceae. Hellebores are sold as decorative, potted plants and as shade-loving landscape plants favored for their attractive and prolonged blooms in late winter or early spring. In April of 2008, downy mildew-like growth was observed on the foliage of approximately 60 containerized plants of Helleborus ‘Blue Lady’, ‘Pink Lady’, ‘White Lady’, and ‘Royal Heritage’ grown outdoors in a retail nursery in coastal San Mateo County, California. Infected foliage had angular, vein-delimited, dark brown-to-black speckled lesions on adaxial leaf surfaces turning dry and necrotic with age. Young leaves were small and distorted. Affected flowers were spotted and brown. The abaxial sides of affected leaves had light brown-to-purplish downy mildew-like growth. Subhyaline conidia, globose to ellipsoid in shape, ranged from 25 to 31 × 17 to 24 μm (average 28 × 21 μm). Conidiophores ranged from 265 to 375 × 5 to 11.5 μm (average 333 × 8.9 μm), branching dichotomously four to five times in the upper half. Morphological measurements fell within the range previously described for Peronospora pulveracea and P. alpicola, which were reported on Helleborus spp. and Ranunculus aconitifolius, respectively (1,2). DNA sequence of the internal transcribed spacer region of rDNA of our isolate (Genbank Accession No. FJ384778) matched sequences of P. pulveracea (Genbank Accession No. AY198270) and P. alpicola (Genbank Accession No. AY198271) with 100% identity. These two organisms are taxonomically indistinguishable by rDNA sequences and are likely to be the same species (3). To our knowledge, this is the first report of P. pulveracea on Helleborus × hybridus in California and the United States. Lenten rose is commercially propagated by seed, which is a potential pathway for introduction of this pathogen. Mature plants are sold and shipped intra- and interstate as decorative flowering plants or nursery stock. The importance and economic impact of this disease is limited, but significant economic losses could occur during production. References: (1) E. A. Gäumann. Beitr. Kryptogamenflora Schweiz 5:113, 1923. (2) G. Hall. Mycopathologia 126:57, 1994. (3) H. Voglmayr. Mycol. Res. 107:1132, 2003.


Plant Disease ◽  
2008 ◽  
Vol 92 (7) ◽  
pp. 1134-1134 ◽  
Author(s):  
H. N. Yue ◽  
Y. F. Wu ◽  
Y. Z. Shi ◽  
K. K. Wu ◽  
Y. R. Li

Paulownia witches'-broom (PaWB) is one of the most important diseases affecting Paulownia tomentosa trees in China. According to 2006 statistics, the disease has affected 880,000 ha of trees for timber production causing billions of dollars in economic losses. During the spring and summer of 2006, a survey was done in Shaanxi Province to confirm phytoplasma infection of paulownia trees exhibiting symptoms of witches'-broom, stunting, yellowing, and proliferating secondary shoots. Foliage samples were collected from 24 symptomatic and 8 symptomless paulownia plants in eight different production fields. Total DNA was extracted from 0.5 g of leaf midrib and stem phloem tissue with a modified cetyltrimethylammoniumbromide (CTAB) method (3). Resulting DNA extracts were analyzed by a nested PCR assay using phytoplasma 16S rRNA gene primer pairs R16mF2/R16mR1 followed by R16F2n/ R16R2 (1), which amplified a 1.4-kb and a 1.2-kb product, respectively, from symptomatic plants. Restriction fragment length polymorphism (RFLP) analysis of the nested 1.2-kb 16S rDNA products with AluI, MseI, HhaI, HpaI, RsaI, BfaI, HinfI, and TaqI endonuclease (2) indicated that all symptomatic plants were infected by a phytoplasma belonging to aster yellows group (16SrI) subgroup D (16SrI-D) phytoplasma strains. A 1.2-kb 16S rDNA sequence (GenBank Accession No. DQ851169) derived from representative strain PaWB-Shaanxi was identical (100%) to that of PaWB phytoplasma (L27033), a known subgroup 16SrI-D strain from Taiwan (2). The agreement between the RFLP analysis and sequence data confirms that PaWB from Shaanxi is a member of subgroup 16SrI-D. To our knowledge, this is the first report of PaWB disease being present in China and of its association with the 16SrI-D subgroup. References: (1) D. E. Gundersen and I.-M. Lee. Phytopathol. Mediterr. 35:144, 1996. (2) I.-M. Lee et al. Inst. J. Syst. Bacteriol. 48:1153, 1998. (3) Y. Qi et al. Biotechnol. Bull. 4:44, 2004.


Plant Disease ◽  
2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Yang Li ◽  
Xiao Ma ◽  
Wenxian Gai ◽  
Luodan Xiao ◽  
zhenhui Gong

Pepper (Capsicum annuum L.) is an important solanaceous vegetable crop, with high nutritional and economic value. However, it is susceptible to Colletotrichum spp. infection during its growth and development, which seriously affects production yield and quality. Chili anthracnose, caused by Colletotrichum spp., is one of the most destructive diseases of pepper. In August 2020, chili anthracnose was observed with widespread distribution in the horticulture field of Northwest A&F University (34.16° N, 108.04° E) in Shaanxi Province, China. Approximately 60% of the pepper plants had disease symptoms typical of anthracnose. Lesions on pepper fruits were dark, circular, sunken, and necrotic, with the presence of orange to pink conidial masses (Figure S1A). To perform fungal isolation, the tissue at the lesion margin was cut from eight symptomatic fruits, surface disinfested with 75% ethanol for 30 s, and 2% NaClO for 1 min, then rinsed three times with sterile distilled water and dried on sterile filter paper. The tissues were placed on potato dextrose agar (PDA) and incubated at 28 ºC in the dark. After 3 days, hyphae growing from tissue of each lesion were recultured on PDA (Liu et al. 2016). A representative single-spore isolate (NWAFU2) was used for morphological characterization, molecular analysis, phylogenetic analysis, and pathogenicity tests. NWAFU2 colonies had gray-white aerial mycelium, and the reverse side of the colonies was dark gray to light yellow after 10-days growth on PDA (Figure S1B-C). Conidia were cylindrical, aseptate, with obtuse to slightly rounded ends, and measured 10.1 to 16.9 (length) × 4.7 to 7.0 (width) μm (n=50) (Figure S1D). Based on morphological features, the isolate was consistent with the description of C. gloeosporioides species complex (Weir et al. 2012). For molecular identification, genomic DNA was extracted using a CTAB method and the internal transcribed spacer (ITS) region, glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase (GAPDH) and partial sequences of actin (ACT) genes were amplified and sequenced using primers ITS1F/ITS4, GDF1/GDR1 and ACT-512F/ACT-783R, respectively (Dowling et al. 2020). Using the BLAST, ITS, ACT, GAPDH gene sequences (GenBank accession nos. MW258690, MW258691 and MW258692, respectively) were 100%, 100% and 98.19% identical to ZJL-4 of C. gloeosporioides (GenBank accession nos. MN075757, MN058142 and MN075666, respectively). Phylogenetic analysis was conducted using MEGA-X (Version 10.0) based on the concatenated sequences of published ITS, ACT and GAPDH for Colletotrichum species using Neighbor-Joining algorithm. The identified isolate (NWAFU2) was closely related to C. gloeosporioides (Figure S2). To confirm the pathogenicity, ten healthy pepper fruits were surface-sterilized and 2 μL of conidial suspension (1×106 conidia/mL) was injected the surface of pepper. Five fruits were inoculated with 2μL sterile distilled water as controls. After inoculation, the fruits were kept in a moist chamber at 28°C in the dark. The experiment was repeated three times. Anthracnose symptoms similar to those observed in the field, were observed 7 days after inoculation (Figure S1F) and control fruits remained healthy. A similarly inoculated detached leaf assay resulted in water-soaked lesions 3 days after inoculation. C. gloeosporioides was reisolated from the infected pepper fruits, fulfilling Koch’s postulates. C. gloeosporioides has been reported to cause chili anthracnose in Sichuan Province, China (de Silva et al. 2019; Liu et al. 2016). However, Shaanxi is one of the main pepper producing areas in china and it is geographically distinct from Sichuan; its climate and environmental conditions are different from Sichuan. Knowledge that C. gloeosporioides causes chili anthracnose of pepper in Shaanxi province, China may aid in the selection of appropriate management tactics for this disease. Reference: de Silva, D. D., Groenewald, J. Z., Crous, P. W., Ades, P. K., Nasruddin, A., Mongkolporn, O., and Taylor, P. W. J. 2019. Identification, prevalence and pathogenicity of Colletotrichum species causing anthracnose of Capsicum annuum in Asia. IMA Fungus 10:8. Dowling, M., Peres, N., Villani, S., and Schnabel, G. 2020. Managing Colletotrichum on Fruit Crops: A "Complex" Challenge. Plant Dis 104:2301-2316. Liu, F. L., Tang, G. T., Zheng, X. J., Li, Y., Sun, X. F., Qi, X. B., Zhou, Y., Xu, J., Chen, H. B., Chang, X. L., Zhang, S. R., and Gong, G. S. 2016. Molecular and phenotypic characterization of Colletotrichum species associated with anthracnose disease in peppers from Sichuan Province, China. Sci Rep 6. Weir, B. S., Johnston, P. R., and Damm, U. 2012. The Colletotrichum gloeosporioides species complex. Stud Mycol 73:115-180.


2018 ◽  
Vol 2018 ◽  
pp. 1-5 ◽  
Author(s):  
Yuheng Yang ◽  
Junhua Hu ◽  
Fajing Chen ◽  
Dekuan Ding ◽  
Changyong Zhou

Target spot, a recently observed citrus disease that is caused by Pseudofabraea citricarpa, can cause substantial economic losses in citrus production. In this study, a 797 bp marker specific to Ps. citricarpa was identified via random amplified polymorphic DNA (RAPD) technique. The primer pair Pc-SFP/Pc-SRP, which was designed from RAPD amplicons, was utilized as a sequence-characterized amplified region (SCAR) marker. This marker identified Ps. citricarpa with a single and distinct band of 389 bp but did not amplify DNA from other tested fungal species. The PCR assay was highly sensitive to the target DNA at picogram levels and could reliably amplify Ps. citricarpa sequences with the Pc-SFP/Pc-SRP primer pair. The SCAR marker that was identified in the present study can facilitate rapid decision-making and precise disease forecasting and management.


Pathogens ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 10 (2) ◽  
pp. 241
Author(s):  
Joon Moh Park ◽  
Jachoon Koo ◽  
Se Won Kang ◽  
Sung Hee Jo ◽  
Jeong Mee Park

Rhodococcus fascians is an important pathogen that infects various herbaceous perennials and reduces their economic value. In this study, we examined R. fascians isolates carrying a virulence gene from symptomatic lily plants grown in South Korea. Phylogenetic analysis using the nucleotide sequences of 16S rRNA, vicA, and fasD led to the classification of the isolates into four different strains of R. fascians. Inoculation of Nicotiana benthamiana with these isolates slowed root growth and resulted in symptoms of leafy gall. These findings elucidate the diversification of domestic pathogenic R. fascians and may lead to an accurate causal diagnosis to help reduce economic losses in the bulb market.


Soil Research ◽  
1994 ◽  
Vol 32 (6) ◽  
pp. 1355 ◽  
Author(s):  
RB Garnsey

Earthworms have the ability to alleviate many soil degradational problems in Australia. An attempt to optimize this resource requires fundamental understanding of earthworm ecology. This study reports the seasonal changes in earthworm populations in the Midlands of Tasmania (<600 mm rainfall p.a.), and examines, for the first time in Australia, the behaviour and survival rates of aestivating earthworms. Earthworms were sampled from 14 permanent pastures in the Midlands from May 1992 to February 1994. Earthworm activity was significantly correlated with soil moisture; maximum earthworm activity in the surface soil was evident during the wetter months of winter and early spring, followed by aestivation in the surface and subsoils during the drier summer months. The two most abundant earthworm species found in the Midlands were Aporrectodea caliginosa (maximum of 174.8 m-2 or 55.06 g m-2) and A. trapezoides (86 m-2 or 52.03 g m-2), with low numbers of Octolasion cyaneum, Lumbricus rubellus and A. rosea. The phenology of A. caliginosa relating to rainfall contrasted with that of A. trapezoides in this study. A caliginosa was particularly dependent upon rainfall in the Midlands: population density, cocoon production and adult development of A. caliginosa were reduced as rainfall reduced from 600 to 425 mm p.a. In contrast, the density and biomass of A. trapezoides were unaffected by rainfall over the same range: cocoon production and adult development continued regardless of rainfall. The depth of earthworm aestivation during the summers of 1992-94 was similar in each year. Most individuals were in aestivation at a depth of 150-200 mm, regardless of species, soil moisture or texture. Smaller aestivating individuals were located nearer the soil surface, as was shown by an increase in mean mass of aestivating individuals with depth. There was a high mortality associated with summer aestivation of up to 60% for juvenile, and 63% for adult earthworms in 1993 in the Midlands. Cocoons did not survive during the summers of 1992 or 1994, but were recovered in 1993, possibly due to the influence of rainfall during late winter and early spring.


Phytotaxa ◽  
2013 ◽  
Vol 146 (1) ◽  
pp. 1 ◽  
Author(s):  
PETER B. HEENAN ◽  
ROB D. SMISSEN

The generic taxonomy of the Nothofagaceae is revised. We present a new phylogenetic analysis of morphological characters and map these characters onto a recently published phylogenetic tree obtained from DNA sequence data. Results of these and previous analyses strongly support the monophyly of four clades of Nothofagaceae that are currently treated as subgenera of Nothofagus. The four clades of Nothofagaceae are robust and well-supported, with deep stem divergences, have evolutionary equivalence with other genera of Fagales, and can be circumscribed with morphological characters. We argue that these morphological and molecular differences are sufficient for the four clades of Nothofagaceae to be recognised at the primary rank of genus, and that this classification will be more informative and efficient than the currently circumscribed Nothofagus with four subgenera.        Nothofagus is recircumscribed to include five species from southern South America, Lophozonia and Trisyngyne are reinstated, and the new genus Fuscospora is described. Fuscospora and Lophozonia, with six and seven species respectively, occur in New Zealand, southern South America and Australia. Trisyngyne comprises 25 species from New Caledonia, Papua New Guinea and Indonesia. New combinations are provided where necessary in each of these genera.


1959 ◽  
Vol 37 (4) ◽  
pp. 419-428 ◽  
Author(s):  
William S. Hoar ◽  
G. Beth Robertson

Goldfish maintained under controlled photoperiods for 6 weeks or longer were relatively more resistant to a sudden elevation in temperature when the daily photoperiods had been long (16 hours) and relatively more resistant to sudden chilling when they had been short (8 hours). The magnitude of the effect varied with the season. Thyroid activity was slightly greater in fish maintained under the shorter photoperiods. The longer photoperiods stimulated more rapid growth of ovaries during late winter and early spring. The endocrine system is considered a link in the chain of events regulating seasonal variations in resistance to sudden temperature change.


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